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Avoiding Predation

Avoiding Predation. Main content from: http://iweb.tntech.edu/cabrown/AnimBehav/4230AntipredatorBehavior.pdf. Two Ways to Avoid Getting Eaten. Predator avoidance behaviors remove animals from being perceived by predators

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Avoiding Predation

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  1. Avoiding Predation Main content from: http://iweb.tntech.edu/cabrown/AnimBehav/4230AntipredatorBehavior.pdf

  2. Two Ways to Avoid Getting Eaten • Predator avoidance behaviors remove animals from being perceived by predators • For this to evolve, encounters with predator should lead to strong decrease in prey survival • Antipredatorbehaviors allow animals to survive once they’ve been perceived by a predator • For these to evolve, behavior should lead to increased survival after detection • Thus, both ultimately require some degree of encounter with predators • Most animals have both types of behaviors in their behavioral repertoire

  3. Stages of Encounters • Prey can enhance survival at 4 distinct stages… • Avoid detection by predator • Avoid attack by predator once detected • Avoid capture by predator once attacked (or pursued) • Avoid consumption by predator once captured

  4. Predator Avoidance Methods I • Hiding in a refuge • May be a burrow, crevice, nest, under rock, in sediment, etc. • Using areas where predator does not occur • Predator may not occur ever in that area, or not occur at some times in that area, or not be active when prey is • Example 1: Buthusoccitanus scorpions are less active when moon is full (more easily seen by predators • Example 2: juvenile Notonectahoffmanni water boatmen avoid areas with cannibalistic adults • Forage in lower quality parts of pond

  5. Predator Avoidance Methods II • Prey may exhibit crypsis, or background matching • Morphological adaptations that allow animal to blend into background • May match color, appearance, or both Clockwise from • Often have behavioral adaptations enhance cryptic appearance • Occurs when prey is active at same time and same area as predator

  6. Predator Avoidance Methods III • Prey may avoid providing appropriate sensory signals to predator • Remain silent (for auditory hunters) • Do not release chemicals • Avoid movement (for visually or vibration sensing hunters) • Prey may exhibit distracting behaviors to enable other (usually related) individuals to remain undetected • Mobbing behavior in some birds and social mammals • Done to distract predator from eggs or young

  7. Mobbing

  8. Avoiding Attack Once Detected • Animal may use a variety of protective mechanisms • Claws, quills, stingers, horns, urticating hairs • Toxins, noxious compounds, sprays, stickysecretions • Large size, fast speed, armor • Here, the mechanisms will deter predator from attacking • Often advertise noxious or toxic defenses (that are hidden from predator’s view) with aposematic (or warning) coloration • Prey may also perform behaviors to advertise defenses • Examples include tail-flagging and stotting

  9. Avoiding Attack Once Detected • Animals that are not dangerous may exhibit mimicry of other animals that are • There are two individuals/species • Model is always toxic, noxious or dangerous • Mimic may or may not be toxic or dangerous • Mimic often strongly resemble model in appearance • Some mimics bear less resemblance except for certain body parts or when in certain positions • Still others mimic sounds or scents of model

  10. Batesian Mimicry“Bats aren't dangerous, but people think they are” • Model is toxic/dangerous, mimic is not • Mimic benefits from this, model does not • However, mimic only benefits if it is relatively rare compared to model • If mimic too common, predator encounters it too frequently and doesn’t learn to avoid this type of prey • Harms both mimic and model

  11. Müllerian Mimicry • Both individuals/species are toxic or dangerous • Both species benefit from this • Predator will learn to avoid both when eating either one • Selection should lead to increased similarity • Once thought to be much less common than Batesian mimicry, but may be equally common

  12. Avoiding Capture Once Attacked • Use the defensive attributes (sprays, quills, stings, goo, armor, etc.) as protection • Flee (run away) • Fight back against predator • This can also include performing threatening behaviors that deter predator (bluffing)

  13. Spray

  14. Avoiding Consumption Once Captured Play Dead • Lay dead (thanatosis) • Often slows intensity of predator attacks

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